Bioluminescent imaging of Cdk2 inhibition in vivo

Author:  ["Guo-Jun Zhang","Michal Safran","Wenyi Wei","Erik Sorensen","Peter Lassota","Nikolai Zhelev","Donna S Neuberg","Geoffrey Shapiro","William G Kaelin Jr"]

Publication:  Nature Medicine

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:     Medicine

Abstract

Many proteins and pathways of pharmaceutical interest impinge on ubiquitin ligases or their substrates. The cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) inhibitor p27, for example, is polyubiquitylated in a cell cycle–dependent manner by a ubiquitin ligase complex containing the F-box protein Skp2. Regulated turnover of p27 is due, at least partly, to its phosphorylation by Cdk2 on threonine 187, which generates a Skp2-binding site. We made a p27-luciferase (p27Luc) fusion protein and show here that its abundance, like that of p27, is regulated by Skp2 in a cell cycle–dependent manner. As predicted, p27Luc levels increased after blocking Cdk2 activity with inhibitory proteins, peptides or small interfering RNA (siRNA). Accumulation of p27Luc in response to Cdk2 inhibitory drugs (flavopiridol and R-roscovitine) was demonstrable in human tumor cells in vivo using noninvasive bioluminescent imaging. In theory, the approach described here could be used to develop bioluminescent reporters for any drug target that directly or indirectly affects the turnover of a ubiquitin ligase substrate.

Cite this article

Zhang, GJ., Safran, M., Wei, W. et al. Bioluminescent imaging of Cdk2 inhibition in vivo. Nat Med 10, 643–648 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1038/nm1047

View full text

>> Full Text:   Bioluminescent imaging of Cdk2 inhibition in vivo

Reversal of obesity by targeted ablation of adipose tissue

Mutation of the COG complex subunit gene COG7 causes a lethal congenital disorder